The 41-year-old American sporting legend was airlifted to hospital after a crash on the slopes during the women’s downhill skiing final.
American skiing legend Lindsey Vonn endured a horror crash on her Olympic return in the women’s downhill and was airlifted to hospital. Hopes of a victorious comeback six years on from retirement had been hit by a serious knee injury suffered less than a fortnight out from the finals.
But the 41-year-old decided to compete in the winter Olympics. She burst out of the start in the final but caught a gate with her right arm after just 13 seconds, sending her tumbling down the slope to a halt.
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She lay motionless on the slopes during the women’s downhill skiing final before being airlifted to hospital. The incident sparked an emotional reaction from the BBC’s broadcast team.
The Mirror reports Chemmy Alcott choked up as she said: “I actually feel guilty that I am this emotional. When we thought about the end of this story, we never thought and never believed that it would end in her in a clump at the side of the piece, not moving.
“What we saw is the top section is running very fast. The left-footer is really hard for healthy athletes.
“She is trying to throw herself down this, gunning for the podium. She doesn’t have a left knee, she drops her hip back and this is an absolute nightmare. It is an absolute nightmare.
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“The whole world is watching and we wanted to see her come through the finish smiling, because she was fast, we wanted to see her take on this challenge, it is just really tough.
“I feel so bad that I feel this way because her family and all over her team… it is so sad.
“We have to be realistic. The risk was really really high for her to take on the G-force of this downhill.
“The risk she faced when you fall are double that. Her body will not be able to withstand that. The crowd here, everyone is feeling it. There is intermittent clapping and I think that is hope that she is going to get up.
“But then the screen comes on and we see all the medical staff around here. They have actually had to put on some background noise because it is quite uncomfortable.”
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump wants to keep home prices high, bypassing calls to ramp up construction so people can afford what has been a ticket to the middle class.
Trump has instead argued for protecting existing owners who have watched the values of their homes climb. It’s a position that flies in the face of what many economists, the real estate industry, local officials and apartment dwellers say is needed to fix a big chunk of America’s affordability problem.
“I don’t want to drive housing prices down. I want to drive housing prices up for people that own their homes, and they can be assured that’s what’s going to happen,” Trump told his Cabinet on Jan. 29.
That approach could bolster the Republican president’s standing with older voters, a group that over time has been more likely to vote in midterm elections. Those races in November will determine whether Trump’s party can retain control of the House and Senate.
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“You have a lot of people that have become wealthy in the last year because their house value has gone up,” Trump said. “And you know, when you get the housing — when you make it too easy and too cheap to buy houses — those values come down.”
But by catering to older baby boomers on housing, Trump risks alienating the younger voters who expanded his coalition in 2024 and helped him win a second term, and he could wade into a “generational war” in the midterms, said Brent Buchanan, whose polling firm Cygnal advises Republicans.
“The under-40 group is the most important right now — they are the ones who put Trump in the White House,” Buchanan said. “Their desire to show up in an election or not is going to make the difference in this election. If they feel that Donald Trump is taking care of the boomers at their expense, that is going to hurt Republicans.”
The logic in appealing to older voters
In the 2024 presidential election, 81% of Trump’s voters were homeowners, according to AP VoteCast data. This means many of his supporters already have mortgages with low rates or own their homes outright, possibly blunting the importance of housing as an issue.
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Older voters tend to show up to vote more than do younger people, said Oscar Pocasangre, a senior data analyst at liberal think tank New America who has studied the age divide in U.S. politics. “However, appealing to older voters may prove to be a misguided policy if what’s needed to win is to expand the voting base,” Pocasangre said.
Booker Lightman, 30, a software engineer in Highlands Ranch, Colorado, who identifies politically as a libertarian Republican, said the shortage of housing has been a leading problem in his state.
Lightman just closed on a home last month, and while he and his wife, Alice, were able to manage the cost, he said that the lack of construction is pushing people out of Colorado. “There’s just not enough housing supply,” he said.
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Shay Hata, a real estate agent in the Chicago and Denver areas, said she handles about 100 to 150 transactions a year. But she sees the potential for a lot more. “We have a lack of inventory to the point where most properties, particularly in the suburbs, are getting between five and 20 offers,” she said, describing what she sees in the Chicago area.
New construction could help more people afford homes because in some cases, buyers qualify for discounted mortgage rates from the builders’ preferred lenders, Hata said. She called the current situation “very discouraging for buyers because they’re getting priced out of the market.”
But pending construction has fallen under Trump. Permits to build single-family homes have plunged 9.4% over the past 12 months in October, the most recent month available, to an annual rate of 876,000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Trump’s other ideas to help people buy houses
Trump has not always been against increasing housing supply.
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During the 2024 campaign, Trump’s team said he would create tax breaks for homebuyers, trim regulations on construction, open up federal land for housing developments and make monthly payments more manageable by cutting mortgage rates. Advisers also claimed that housing stock would open up because of Trump’s push for mass deportations of people who were in the United States illegally.
As recently as October, Trump urged builders to ramp up construction. “They’re sitting on 2 Million empty lots, A RECORD. I’m asking Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to get Big Homebuilders going and, by so doing, help restore the American Dream!” Trump posted on social media, referring to the government-backed lenders.
But more recently, he has been unequivocal on not wanting to pursue policies that would boost supply and lower prices.
In office, Trump has so far focused his housing policy on lobbying the Federal Reserve to cut its benchmark interest rates. He believes that would make mortgages more affordable, although critics say it could spur higher inflation. Trump announced that the two mortgage companies, which are under government conservatorship, would buy at least $200 billion in home loan securities in a bid to reduce rates.
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Trump also wants Congress to ban large financial institutions from buying homes. But he has rejected suggestions for expanding rules to let buyers use 401(k) retirement accounts for down payments, telling reporters that he did not want people to take their money out of the stock market because it was doing so well.
There are signs that lawmakers in both parties see the benefits of taking steps to add houses before this year’s elections. There are efforts in the Senate and House to jump-start construction through the use of incentives to change zoning restrictions, among other policies.
One of the underlying challenges on affordability is that home prices have been generally rising faster than incomes for several years.
This makes it harder to save for down payments or upgrade to a nicer home. It also means that the places where people live increasingly double as their key financial asset, one that leaves many families looking moneyed on paper even if they are struggling with monthly bills.
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There is another risk for Trump. If the economy grows this year, as he has promised, that could push up demand for houses — as well as their prices — making the affordability problem more pronounced, said Edward Pinto, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a center-right think tank.
Pinto said construction of single-family homes would have to rise by 50% to 100% during the next three years for average home price gains to be flat — a sign, he said, that Trump’s fears about falling home prices were probably unwarranted.
“It’s very hard to crater home prices,” Pinto said.
The application by TCC Land Limited and Jollie Hollies Company Limited envisages the development would take place on an 12 hectare site currently used for agricultural purposes south of Stokesley Road and also describes plans for associated road infrastructure.
Approval at this stage would mean the principle of development had been established, allowing a developer to bring forward more detailed plans.
Dozens of objections have so far been raised with Redcar and Cleveland Council which has yet to determine the application, but has deemed the proposal to be in the ‘major’ category.
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Guisborough Town Council has also objected, stating the scheme would be contrary to various elements of planning policy.
It said it was outside the development limits of Guisborough and also highlighted the site’s proximity to the North York Moors National Park.
Guisborough ward councillor Bill Suthers made similar points in his objection, stating the planned housing would extend beyond the residential boundary of Guisborough as defined by the council’s Local Plan.
He also said it would “negatively impact” on the national park setting and have the same impact on improvements to the Guisbrough Forest Walkway, in Pinchinthorpe.
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A design and access statement compiled on behalf of the applicant, accompanying the submission, said the development proposals could make a significant contribution to addressing local housing needs.
It said it would be a “high-quality and inherently sustainable neighbourhood of 117 dwellings, providing a variance of family homes”.
The site offered “excellent opportunities for the creation of a distinctive residential neighbourhood set within an attractive framework of open space and landscape”.
An excellent range of local facilities and services lay nearby in Guisborough, the statement said, as well as access to Middlesbrough and Nunthorpe via the A171.
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It said a “key entrance” to be created on the northern boundary would comfortably accommodate cars, pedestrians and bicycles and be capable of servicing the site and providing a link to neighbouring communities.
Streets in the development would be supplemented by a number of hard and soft public spaces, alongside a network of pedestrian and cycle routes and existing public rights of way.
The statement also said existing hedgerow and trees that run along the perimeter of, and through, the site will be retained where possible and enhanced.
Redcar and Cleveland Council is having to navigate Government targets which last year determined more than 600 new homes should be built and completed in the borough each year, a 156 per cent increase on the previous 234.
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Council chiefs have said the target is achievable if the right sites are allocated for development, but the authority will also have to demonstrate a five year supply in order that the target can be delivered, something that will not be possible until the adoption of a new Local Plan, expected some time in 2027.
This could lead to a “corridor of uncertainty” whereby would-be developers submit applications on unallocated land.
Last June the council issued a “call for sites” writing letters to landowners in the borough with about 100 submissions being received and subject to initial assessment.
Current housing completion targets, which extend over 15 years, mean the council could have to plan for as many as 10,000 new homes – the size of a small town – which would represent a 16% increase in the borough’s housing stock.
The American damaged her ACL when falling in a World Cup contest at Crans-Montana just over a week ago. However, she was determined to compete in Sunday’s event at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre.
And in an update released on Sunday evening, Team U.S. Ski & Snowboard Team confirmed: “Lindsey Vonn sustained an injury, but is in stable condition and in good hands with a team of American and Italian physicians.”
In a separate update, Vonn’s sister, Karin Kildow, told USA Today: “I mean, that definitely was the last thing we wanted to see and it happened quick and when that happens, you’re just immediately hoping she’s okay.
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“And it was scary because when you start to see the stretchers being put out, it’s not a good sign. But she really … she just dared greatly and she put it all out there. So it’s really hard to see but we just really hope she’s okay.
“She does have all of her surgeons and her PT staff here and her doctors, so I’m sure they’ll give us a report and we’ll meet her at whatever hospital she’s at.”
After a lengthy delay while the course remained closed, Vonn’s fellow American Breezy Johnson secured Team USA’s first medal of the Winter Olympics, finishing in 1:36:10 to take gold – the first American to do so since Vonn herself.
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And speaking afterwards, Johnson said: “My heart goes out to her (Vonn). I hope it’s not as bad as it looked.
“I know how difficult it is to ski this course and how sometimes, because you love this course so much, when you crash on it and hurts you like that, it hurts that much worse. My heart just goes out to her.”
Another team-mate, fourth-placed Jacqueline Wiles, said: “I’m still processing a lot, after what happened with Lindsey. She looks hurt quite a bit. So I’m really happy, proud of Breezy and my heart hurts for Lindsey.
“It sucks for her. We’re such a tight group. Lindsey has really been a huge mentor for all of us and seeing her go down like that, it really sucks.
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“It doesn’t change anything about her legacy. She’s a fighter and that’s the way that she’s going to go out and ski every time.”
Sky Sports discounted Premier League and EFL package
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Sky has slashed the price of its Essential TV and Sky Sports bundle for the 2025/26 season, saving members £336 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more.
Sky will show at least 215 live Premier League games this season, an increase of up to 100 more.
Liverpool are upping the tempo at the moment but City have the latest chance, with Marmoush laying it off to Semenyo and the winger firing straight at Alisson.
(Peter Byrne/PA Wire)
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:45
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Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
CLOSE! Ekitike almost finds the first goal!
Great work from Wirtz in the area to keep the ball alive, and he ships it for Gakpo, who lays off a pass to Ekitike.
The Frenchman tries to curl a first-time effort into the far corner but it flies narrowly wide!
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:42
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Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
The hosts have started the second half much better barring that close call from Alisson.
Szoboszlai is the latest to have a pop from just outside the area, but it’s right at Donnarumma.
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:41
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Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
Already a half-chance for both sides, with Salah scuffing from Gakpo’s pass before Marmoush shies away from a challenge and Alisson manages to clear having rced outside his area.
Van Dijk is next in the book after the Liverpool captain scythes down Haaland.
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:36
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KICK-OFF! Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
Back underway! The hosts get us started but a long ball over the top goes straight out of play.
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:34
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HALF-TIME! Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
A huge half coming up for both sides then. City might well like the title bid is over if they end the day nine points behind Arsenal, but they’ve been on top and will feel like they can get a rare away win today.
Jamie Carragher says Liverpool have been “poor”, but the hosts are still in this even though they’re lacking control at the moment.
If it stays like this, Liverpool will end the day three points behind fifth-placed Chelsea and four behind Man Utd in fourth.
We’ll be back underway soon at Anfield.
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Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:29
HALF-TIME! Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
(REUTERS)
(Peter Byrne/PA Wire)
(Getty Images)
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:24
HALF-TIME! Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
The referee blows the whistle to end an intriguing first half at Anfield.
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The game fizzled out towards the end of the half but the majority of it made for interesting watching, with City controlling large parts and offering more in attack but Liverpool beginning to look dangerous as they settled into it.
A fascinating next 45 minutes is coming up!
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:19
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Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
Just two minutes of added time at Anfield.
Chris Wilson8 February 2026 17:18
Liverpool 0-0 Manchester City
A great ball over the top from Konate finds Ekitike. The hosts try and work the attack but Khusanov does well to shepherd the ball out of play.
In moments of creeping authoritarianism, culture sometimes reacts faster than institutions. Bruce Springsteen’s rush-released song in the wake of killings of two Minneapolis residents by agents of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was not just an act of commentary, but a deliberate intervention in public discourse.
Streets of Minneapolis operates as an alarm signal, its directness placing it in the public square, where naming and narration carry political weight. What also distinguishes Streets of Minneapolis is not just its fidelity to the tradition of the protest song, but its mode of circulation as a rapid response in the digital age.
This is Springsteen at his most declarative, operating not in the interior emotional space of the confessional singer-songwriter but in the outward-facing register of public address. His specificity – naming people, streets, organisations and the “winter of ’26” – marks the song as political communication rather than personal reflection.
His framing of the killings involves a shift from individual tragedies towards a shared civic injury. The repeated invocation of “our Minneapolis” performs rhetorical work, translating private loss into a shared collective experience and situating it as a wider public concern that extends beyond the city itself.
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That movement from the individual to the collective places Streets of Minneapolis within a wider lineage of protest song, creating narratives out of real events so they can be remembered and acted upon. In this sense, the song does not simply respond to politics, but actively participates in political thought and action. “We’ll take a stand” is not a metaphorical flourish but a direct appeal.
Springsteen makes this lineage explicit through the early acoustic section, replete with insistent harmonica, and a vocal delivery and intonation that consciously signal Bob Dylan’s early protest music. Structurally, too, Springsteen’s call to action echoes Dylan works like The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll – moral force emerging through the accumulation of detail and reportage.
While Dylan’s later career moved away from direct protest toward the personal and allegorical, Springsteen here leans into that more direct mode of storytelling. It follows the protest song logic whereby narration becomes an engine of persuasion, reshaping contemporary events into historical record.
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The reference carries added resonance given Dylan’s Minnesota roots, serving as a reminder that place, memory and music have long been intertwined in American protest culture.
Springsteen quotes himself, too, both musically and thematically, with a clear nod in the title to Streets of Philadelphia and a closing musical call-back to Born in the USA, its own tub-thumping aesthetic belying the portrait of a disillusioned Vietnam veteran in the lyrics.
These are not just nostalgic gestures but also markers of continuity. By folding earlier works into this new song, he situates the current moment within a longer trajectory of American struggle, via musical linkages between himself and Dylan – and Woody Guthrie before that.
A memorial to Alex Pretti and Renee Good, both Minneapolis residents killed by ICE agents. Zuma Press / Alamy
Digital circulation and rapid response
Where protest songs once depended on live performance, radio play and physical distribution, they now travel through platforms. Within hours of release, Streets of Minneapolis was embedded in news coverage, shared across social media and dissected in comment threads and reaction videos.
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Listeners encounter it not only as a song but as a reference point to be reposted, quoted, argued or aligned with. In that process, its energy comes less from a single, fixed message than from how it is used, repeated and spread through ongoing conversations.
This dynamic places protest music alongside other contemporary forms of political communication, particularly those shaped by meme culture and the logic of the online platforms through which much creative work is experienced. Short excerpts, lyrical fragments and recognisable musical cues circulate easily across feeds, videos and posts, where they are paired with captions, visuals and commentary.
In recent election cycles, for instance, music has functioned less as a background soundtrack or simple celebrity endorsement than as material that can be repurposed – looped in clips, used ironically, set against images, or mobilised to signal approval or dissent. In this environment, music functions as a part of the communicative infrastructure, enabling participation as much as persuasion.
This also comes amid growing political conflict around culture itself. While there is a longer history of public disputes between the Trump administrations and the artistic community, these tensions have recently escalated into direct interventions, including the cancellation of shows and the temporary closure of the Kennedy Center, pointing to an environment in which music and performance are increasingly politicised and directly entangled with power.
Seen in this context, Streets of Minneapolis is both traditional and distinctly contemporary. It draws on the narrative starkness and moral framing of folk protest, but gains traction through digital circulation. The killings in Minneapolis of Renée Good and Alex Pretti were the immediate catalyst, but the song’s significance lies in how it carries that moment forward.
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As authoritarian power shifts gear, from creeping practice to open and violent assertion, the protest song adjusts its form and reach. Streets of Minneapolis reflects that transition, drawing on Springsteen’s longstanding role as a public narrator of American life. It can’t halt state action, but it can help to prevent it from going unnoticed and unrecorded.
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The Manchester Evening News looks back on cases before our region this week
Andrew Bardsley, Greta Simpson and Amy Walker Court reporter
17:23, 08 Feb 2026
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An asylum seeker who sexually assaulted a woman is amongst those who have been jailed this week in Greater Manchester.
Tadi Alemeyeha grabbed the woman and tried to kiss her before making a ‘cut-throat’ gesture to stop her from reporting him.
Also locked up this week was a sneaky accountant who stole £130k from her company in the form of unauthorised overtime, unauthorised credit card use and petty cash.
And a cocky thug who got a dressing down from a judge after laughing his way through his sentencing hearing.
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Prison terms are handed out to the worst offenders each week. And Manchester Evening News reporters are on hand to cover the most serious cases.
Here is a roundup of the cases heard before our courts this week:
Nicola Clarke
A head accountant for a top firm has been jailed after defrauding the company out of nearly £130,000. Nicola Clarke, 56, had been working for Business Computer Projects Ltd since 1987 and went on to be promoted to the head of accounts.
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She held sole responsibility for all the financial aspects of the company, Minshull Street Crown Court heard. However, from 2008, she abused her to position to steal from them in three ‘discreet’ ways; by claiming unauthorised overtime payments, stealing petty cash and unauthorised use of the company’s credit card.
The total loss to the company was £128,352. Clarke, of Elm Tree Road, Bredbury, was jailed for 21 months.
A man living in a hotel housing asylum seekers sexually assaulted a woman before threatening her and ordering her to stay silent. Tadi Alemeyeha, 23, was living at the Britannia Country House Hotel in Didsbury at the time.
He arrived in the UK a few weeks earlier, a court heard. He initially denied the attack in August, but changed his plea to guilty as he was due to face trial at Minshull Street Crown Court.
He followed the woman before grabbing her as she tried to move away, it was said. Alemeyeha tried to kiss her. When the woman ran off, he put his finger to his lips before making a cut-throat gesture.
Alemeyeha – listed in court documents as living at the Britannia Country House Hotel, Palatine Road – pleaded guilty to sexually assault and was jailed for 18 months. He was ordered to sign the sex offender register for 10 years and slapped with a restraining order.
A smirking thug who terrorised his ex-girlfriend was slammed by a judge over his antics in court before he was jailed.
Kai Pritchard, 26, smirked and shook his head as details of the shocking abuse he committed against his former partner was detailed. “I don’t know why you are smiling while in the dock,” Judge Suzanne Goddard KC told Pritchard.
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“There’s always two sides to every story though, isn’t there?,” Pritchard replied during an outburst. “Your attitude in court was not impressive,” Judge Goddard told Pritchard, before jailing him for four years and ten months.
A judge blasted a paedophile who continuously shook his head as she jailed him for historic sex offences. Graham Tardif, 78, had been convicted after trial of rape of a girl under 16; three offences of indecent assault of a girl under 14; indecent assault of a girl under 16, sexual assault of a girl by touching and four offences of sexual assault of a girl under 13 by penetration.
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Manchester Crown Court that Tardif, of Oldham, had abused the three girls over a 20 year period dating back to the late 1990s. The victims cannot be identified for legal reasons.
Tardif, of Stephenson Street, Failsworth, was jailed for 14 years.
A greedy loan shark who ran an illegal ‘payday loan scheme’ targeted vulnerable people and left them ‘living in fear’ when they were unable to pay back the high-interest funds.
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Alan Fawcett claimed he ran a business on an online marketplace, buying and selling games consoles and TVs. He was actually handing out around £100,000 in loans to people in Greater Manchester, receiving an estimated £130,000 back in repayments over a two-year period.
When borrowers struggled to repay what they had borrowed – often charged with at least 50 per cent interest – the crook went on to threaten them, leaving some ‘living in fear’ for themselves and their families, Bolton Crown Court heard on Wednesday (February 4). One of the borrowers said they isolated themselves, ‘still close the blinds and don’t leave the house’.
Fawcett, 54 of Warrington Road, Ince, Wigan, was sentenced to four years in jail for money laundering and 18 months for illegal money lending.
A serial robber lay in wait before pouncing on vulnerable women across Manchester. Ten separate incidents were recorded between August 17 and September 3 last year in Salford, Manchester and Bury.
It was reported to offers that a man had approached lone women in public spaces before forcibly stealing their handbags and belongings. He would often drag the victims to the ground and wrestle them during the robberies before fleeing on foot.
A search of a suspect’s home later revealed the man behind the crimes was Jason Cunliffe.
Cunliffe, of Wilton Road in Crumpsall, was jailed for 14 years.
A drug addict robbed a vulnerable disabled man and stole hundreds of pounds from him after exploiting his kindness.
Adam Wood, 35, ordered his victim to transfer £1,400 after turning up at his home in Eccles, Salford. Even after the man had allowed Wood to stay at his flat, Wood became physically aggressive and attacked him with the crutch he uses to get around.
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At one point Wood picked up a knife and threatened to ‘slice him up’, Manchester Crown Court heard. Wood was sentenced to five years and four months in prison after pleading guilty to robbery; threatening a person with a bladed article; and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
A detective used police systems to track a woman he met in ASDA and convince her to go on a date with him before he began manipulating and controlling her, a court has heard.
Michael Harvey met the victim by chance at the supermarket in Rawtenstall back in 2012 before going on to use the police computer systems illegitimately, inputting her car registration plate to find out personal details about her, including her landline number.
The victim reported the offences to the police in July 2022 and the 64-year-old was arrested at his home in Eskdale, Skelmersdale, on October 9, 2023. He later pleaded guilty to engaging in controlling and coercive behaviour between December 2015 and July 2016. He also previously pleaded guilty to unauthorised access to computer material. He was cleared of three counts of rape after a separate trial in 2025.
The former officer worked as a detective in Lancashire Police’s Sexual Offenders Management Unit at the time of the offending before retiring from the Force in 2018. Appearing at Preston Session’s House on Thursday (February 5), he was jailed for 30 months and given a ten-year restraining order.
City have won only one of their last six Premier League games and the pressure is on them to keep pace with Arsenal. Liverpool have also struggled recently but come into the game on a high after they ended a five-game winless run in the Premier League by thrashing Newcastle last weekend. Follow the game LIVE below with our dedicated match blog, including expert insight.
I would really recommend it if you have thick frizzy hair like I do!
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Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve seen the hype around the Dyson Airwrap. Promising to shape, dry and curl your hair without tangles or frizz, it’s always seemed like the dream hair tool.
But with a hefty £400 price tag, I’ve never bought one, as it seemed like way too much money for what is essentially a glorified hairdryer. On a recent trip to Costco in Thurrock, I found that they were selling the Airwrap for about £280 with tax – a fraction of what it costs from the actual Dyson website.
So I decided to treat myself and see if it was really worth the hype! Full disclaimer, I have thick, pretty wavy hair that gets really frizzy if I let it air-dry on its own.
I also have a significant amount of damage from when 20-year-old me decided to dye her whole head blonde with a box dye from Superdrug. So I had pretty low hopes that the Dyson would actually do my hair how I want it to, despite the big price tag.
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The Airwrap I bought came with the fast dryer attachment, a loop brush and a 40mm barrel to curl my hair. You can buy newer models with more attachments, but these are obviously more expensive.
I did some research on how to use the Airwrap most effectively after I made my purchase, and people on social media said to blow-dry your hair to about 80% dry after washing before going in with the curling barrel.
I also used the Beauty Works Dream Shine Leave In Blow Dry Formula spray after drying my hair a bit, to see if it would help hold the curls there for longer. My first impression was that the dryer is pretty strong!
I have a fair amount of hair, and my old Babyliss dryer would take about 15 minutes to dry it all. The Dyson got it to 80% dry in maybe 10, which I was very impressed with, considering how small the airflow hole is!
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Then it was time to curl. The model of Dyson I bought has a little toggle on the top, so you can change the airflow direction to make the curls go the way you want them to.
I took small sections of hair, held them flat against the barrel until they caught on, and boom – the machine did the rest of the work for me! I really enjoyed not being burned by a curling iron, and I found the curling process much less sore on my arms than if I were to do it manually with a normal tool.
It was also significantly quicker. I got a full blow-out look in about 15 minutes – when I used to attempt it with a round brush and a dryer, it would take more like 45 minutes and two achy arms.
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These curls held for a few hours – but I have a bad habit of touching my hair all the time, which probably made it last for a shorter period. It also definitely takes getting used to, and I’m considering buying a mouse to make the style last all day!
There are also other options if you’re looking to splurge on a fun hair-drying tool. The Shark Flex Style is a significantly cheaper option, clocking in at about £210, and the £220 Beauty Works AERIS Multi-Styler has some rave reviews too.
I do have a couple of issues with the Dyson, though. Firstly, you do need to buy products to put on your hair to make the curls hold if you have flat, frizzy hair like I do, which obviously makes the experience even more expensive. Secondly, the model I bought didn’t come with a bag to put it and all the attachments in, so I had to purchase a separate storage bag!
In summary, if you’re looking to treat yourself and want a hair tool that won’t damage your hair as much as a traditional curling iron, I would really recommend the Dyson Airwrap. I would definitely look at some reviews on TikTok or Instagram, in addition to some tutorials, to make sure you really get the most bang for your buck – but if you have a girlfriend who’s been yearning for one of these for ages, they make for a perfect Valentine’s Day gift!
The Team USA athlete was taking part in her first Olympics in eight years just days after she completely ruptured her ACL in her knee
Caroline Barry and Daniel Blackham
16:55, 08 Feb 2026
Karin Kildow, the sister of Olympic star Lindsey Vonn, has shared an update after the devastating accident at the Winter Olympics today (Sunday, February 8).
The 41 year old Team USA athlete was taking part in her first Olympics in eight years, just days after she completely ruptured her ACL in her knee. The Olympics are being held at Milan Cortina and Vonn was on the downhill Alpine when the accident happened, reported the Express.
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Viewers were left watching in horror as Vonn appeared to lose her footing after she struck a gate with her right arm. This caused her to veer to the right while she was still airbourne and despite attempts to regain control, she hit the snow at an incredible speed.
The arena went quiet as Vonn’s cries could be heard amid the silence. Organisers switched on music to cover the silence from the stunned and worried spectators.
Vonn was placed in a medical bag then airlifted to hospital in a yellow helicopter that carried her above the snow covered mountains.
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Speaking to USA Today, Vonn’s sister Karin Kildow said Vonn was conscious of all the dangers and was merely testing her limits. She reassured supporters that Vonn was receiving care from the finest medical professionals available.
“I mean that definitely was the last thing we wanted to see and it happened quick and when that happens, you’re just immediately hoping she’s okay,” she said.
“But she really … she just dared greatly and she put it all out there. So it’s really hard to see, but we just really hope she’s okay.
“She does have all of her surgeons and her PT staff here and her doctors, so I’m sure they’ll give us a report and we’ll meet her at whatever hospital she’s at.”
Following a considerable delay whilst the course remained suspended, Vonn’s compatriot Breezy Johnson claimed Team USA’s opening medal of the Winter Olympics, clocking 1:36:10 to capture gold becoming the first American to achieve this since Vonn herself.